I’m extremely allergic to milk so I have to avoid it at all times, and in the United States, there is milk in so much things and in random places that shouldn’t be there like in bread. What does milk even contribute to it? Asides that, milk is in cheese, and cheese is in many places, as well as the many milk products like whey and buttermilk, limiting me heavily in what I can eat. Besides that, whatever alternatives there are to replace foods with milk is way more expensive than its milk counterpart, making me spend way more money because of my damn allergies. Like, why???? Besides, I’m literally the only one in my family with these allergies, so talk about shitty genetics. To add to that, not many parties and restaurants couldn’t give a single fuck about my allergies, putting me at way more risk, as most restaurant menus don’t have indicators for if it has dairy or not, like I could die if I literally eat those, incompetency. And besides, consuming dairy is literally culture over there, leaving me alone. I wish I could live in denial about it.
I’m also allergic to peanuts but, peanuts aren’t used in much, so I’m alright about that, but dairy allergies really suck.
I’m also considering maybe becoming vegan, it probably wouldn’t be that hard to adjust to it.
Most people are lactose intolerant, actually. Only about 35% of people have the full ability to digest lactose. That's not quite the same thing as an allergy, but even so dairy is not the norm worldwide.
That map looks extremely arbitrary to me. Knowing what little I know of a few cuisines, it doesn't sound possible that regions where there's a very rich tradition of meals/desserts with milk and a prevalence of yoghurt and cheese would have 30-60% lactose intolerance.
I was gonna disagree but like... Mongolia is in the dark blue? And most of the middle east + India?
Places like India and Korea have quite a bit of dairy and cheese for sure. This map seems too broad to be accurate.